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Unusual Catalytic Properties of High-Energetic-Facet Polar Metal Oxides

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ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
卷 54, 期 2, 页码 366-378

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00641

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Heterogeneous catalysis is crucial in chemical industries, energy conversion, and environmental technologies. The surface morphology and structure of solid catalysts significantly affect catalytic performances, particularly on metal oxides with diverse surface features. The effects of exposed facets are contentious, influencing surface energy, defect formation, electronic configurations, and charge migration in heterogeneous catalysis. Various relaxation processes generate different surface features, necessitating novel techniques to study facet effects accurately.
Heterogeneous catalysis is an area of great importance not only in chemical industries but also in energy conversion and environmental technologies. It is well-established that the specific surface morphology and structure of solid catalysts exert remarkable effects on catalytic performances, since most physical and chemical processes take place on the surface during catalytic reactions. Different from the widely studied faceted metallic nanoparticles, metal oxides give more complicated structures and surface features. Great progress has been achieved in controlling the shape and exposed facets of transition metal oxides during nanocrystal growth, usually by using surface-directing agents (SDAs). However, the effects of exposed facets remain controversial among researchers. It should be noted that high-energetic facets, especially polar facets, tend to lower their surface energy via different relaxation processes, such as surface reconstruction, redox change, adsorption of countercharged species, etc. These processes can subsequently lead to surface defect formation and break the surface stoichiometry, and the resulting changes in electronic configurations and charge migration properties all play important roles in heterogeneous catalysis. Because different materials prefer different relaxation methods, various surface features are created, and different techniques are required to investigate the different features from facet to facet. Conventional characterization techniques such as X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, etc. appear to be insufficient to elucidate the underlying principles of the facet effects. Consequently, an increasing number of novel techniques have been developed to differentiate the surface features, enabling greater understanding of the effects of facets on heterogeneous catalysis. In this Account, on the basis of previous studies by our own group, we will focus on the effects of tailored facets on heterogeneous catalysis introduced by engineered simple binary metal oxide nanomaterials primarily with exposed polar facets, in combination with detailed surface studies using a range of new characterization techniques. As a result, fundamental principles of the effects of facets are elucidated, and the structure-activity correlations are demonstrated. The surface features introduced by different relaxation processes are also investigated using a range of characterization techniques. For example, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is used to detect the oxygen vacancies, while probe-assisted solid-state NMR spectroscopy is shown to be facet-sensitive and able to evaluate the surface acidity. It is also shown that such different features influence the heterogeneous catalytic performances in different ways. With the help of first-principles density functional theory calculations, unique properties of the faceted metal oxides are discussed and unraveled. Besides, other materials such as transition metal chalcogenides and layered double hydroxides are also briefly discussed with regard to their application in facet-dependent catalysis studies.

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